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Sunday, May 5, 2024

Announcement of a strike by more than 130 companies of the Zionist regime against the Netanyahu government

Pak Sahafat – More than 130 hi-tech companies announced on Sunday night that they will stop working on Tuesday due to what they called Benjamin Netanyahu’s “coup” for changes in the judicial system, including reducing the powers of the Supreme Court of Israel.

According to Pak Sahafat News Agency from the Palestinian “Sama” news agency, the “Walla” news site and the “Yediot Aharonot” newspaper reported that these companies, which are one of the main pillars of the Israeli economy, decided on Tuesday to warn Netanyahu to cancel his plan.

The “Fight Against the Coup” campaign, which includes Israeli populations and delegations against the Netanyahu government, announced in a statement that a dictatorial coup would severely damage Israel’s civil and economic rights and all organizations.

The campaign announced: For this reason, we want to take radical measures, despite the economic damage, as a first step, we will do this to tell the Israeli government that the coup will never end and Israel will never be a dictatorship, because in Otherwise, it cannot survive even a day without the main economic path.

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This campaign also announced that it is expected that next Thursday, the occupied territories will witness more widespread protests, and a large-scale demonstration will be held on Saturday night against the government’s actions on Kablan Street in Tel Aviv.

Last Saturday night, more than 130,000 Israelis protested in two demonstrations in Tel Aviv against Justice Minister Yariv Levin’s judicial reforms.

Levin has focused on drafting the necessary laws to reform Israel’s judicial system to send it to the Legislative and Constitutional Commission of the Knesset at the end of January.

The Times of Israel reported that Levin announced three weeks ago on Wednesday “community and far-reaching and controversial reforms to Israel’s judicial and legal system,” reforms that, if passed, could be said to be the most radical changes to the system of governance in Israel.

According to this media report, the changes that Levin outlined in a press conference in the Knesset would greatly reduce the power of Israel’s Supreme Court and would allow the government to take over the selection committee for judges, as well as broadly limit the power of the government’s legal advisers.

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